"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
the only thing I don't like about QB.. my bank only offers Quicken download files
Quote from: jsheridan on January 04, 2012, 09:05:24 PMthe only thing I don't like about QB.. my bank only offers Quicken download files Our bank is the same way.. although you can pay a monthly fee for quickbooks files. I will say we just upgraded from QB 2009 to 2012 and i really like the upgrade. Amazon is running a nice upgrade special on QB 2012 right now
Those with 2012, does it really do this?Quote from Amazon reviewer:"Do you want to save invoices as a PDF to email your customer? YOHOHO yeah you can do that... but Quickbooks is sneaky and they will tell YOUR customer to go to a website to pay online without asking you first and if you want to get your money, that's a subscription. "
Quote from: IntegrityShirts on January 05, 2012, 10:41:59 AMThose with 2012, does it really do this?Quote from Amazon reviewer:"Do you want to save invoices as a PDF to email your customer? YOHOHO yeah you can do that... but Quickbooks is sneaky and they will tell YOUR customer to go to a website to pay online without asking you first and if you want to get your money, that's a subscription. "No it does not!We email all invoices easy as pie with no external links to anywhere.
Hey Terry,I'm curious about how you invoice in Quickbooks for screen printing. Can you post an example?We invoice (in a different accounting program) by using an item priced as a base cost that includes a shirt and one color print in one location for each price break and then you can add colors and locations via additional items. For garments we simply have an item "GARMENT STYLE" that is priced at 0 for shirts in the included price range and then we up or down charge based on the price of other garments. We simply fill in the garment style in the description. It works but you don't get the advantage of having an itemized "garments to purchase" list like in some mgmt programs and the invoice looks a bit odd to clients. Really interested to see how other use accounting software for quoting/invoicing/production mgmt. It sounds like the newest version of QB has a lot of features that our web-based accounting software we used last year has and that's a good thing. Attaching receipts and paperwork as scans to the entry is the way to go, so much less paper work to file and sort (and go find later when neeed), just open up the attachment. I have a trial of QB Online Plus right now and some of it is very impressive some of it not so much.
Quote from: ZooCity on January 05, 2012, 12:26:46 PMHey Terry,I'm curious about how you invoice in Quickbooks for screen printing. Can you post an example?We invoice (in a different accounting program) by using an item priced as a base cost that includes a shirt and one color print in one location for each price break and then you can add colors and locations via additional items. For garments we simply have an item "GARMENT STYLE" that is priced at 0 for shirts in the included price range and then we up or down charge based on the price of other garments. We simply fill in the garment style in the description. It works but you don't get the advantage of having an itemized "garments to purchase" list like in some mgmt programs and the invoice looks a bit odd to clients. Really interested to see how other use accounting software for quoting/invoicing/production mgmt. It sounds like the newest version of QB has a lot of features that our web-based accounting software we used last year has and that's a good thing. Attaching receipts and paperwork as scans to the entry is the way to go, so much less paper work to file and sort (and go find later when neeed), just open up the attachment. I have a trial of QB Online Plus right now and some of it is very impressive some of it not so much. Buy some shirts from me and I'll send you an Invoice.Just kidding,Let me grab one and I'll post it.Terry